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No Mas Movement
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USA
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Today and the Washington Post lead with Janet Reno's decision to continue
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her investigation of Bill Clinton's 1996 campaign fund-raising, while the
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New York Times
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and the Los Angeles Times go with the Supreme Court's okay of
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Oregon's assisted suicide law.
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Reno's decision was predicted by the NYT yesterday. By contrast,
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USAT had said she was being advised to stop investigating. Today's
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USAT says that her Justice task force had indeed been for stopping but
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ultimately concluded there were too many unresolved legal questions to do so.
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Clinton's reaction to the news: "I didn't do anything wrong."
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The Supreme Court turned down an appeal of a lower court's dismissal of a
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lawsuit challenging Oregon's law, making that state the first in the country
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where doctor-assisted suicide is legal. A wrinkle in all this, reports the
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NYT , is that the Oregon legislature had already decided to put the
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question to the voters again, so another by-mail referendum currently underway
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will probably be concluded before the original law can take effect.
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The LAT , more than the NYT , emphasizes the Supreme Court's
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general stance on assisted suicide laws--that they involve no constitutional
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issue and hence are the province of the individual states.
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It looks like California is on its way to its third counter-reformation
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referendum result in a row. The LAT runs a front-page story concerning a
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poll about a likely ballot measure that would virtually eliminate bilingual
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public education in California. Those surveyed are wildly for it. This
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preference of landslide proportions doesn't vary much no matter the race,
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income level or age group of the respondents. And here's the big news: Latino
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voters polled favored the initiative by an even greater margin than whites.
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Though fascinating, the story does have a defect common to much press poll
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reporting--nowhere before the story's "jump" to the inside (where, it is well
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known, a lot of readers never tread) does the LAT reveal how large the
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sample is.
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Last spring, the Wall Street Journal reported that Chrysler had adopted a
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policy of requiring magazines where it advertised to give it advance notice and
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pre-publication content summaries of controversial articles. Today, the
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Journal , following up a Detroit News story from yesterday,
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reports that, after mounting criticism from magazine editors and publishers,
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the car company reversed itself. There are, however, notes the Journal ,
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other companies who still insist on editorial peeks. Ameritech, for
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instance.
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The WP gives front-page play to a study by Dartmouth medical
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researchers about the health-care treatment Americans receive at the end of
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their lives. Their findings: the amount of medical care received varies
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tremendously around the country and is apparently more a function of what's
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available than of what's needed. For instance, even though there is no evidence
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of major regional health or mortality differences, on the East Coast, people
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are more than two times as likely to die in a hospital as people are on the
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West Coast. The upshot: patient preference about final care still isn't heeded
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much, and much government medical spending on the elderly is unnecessary.
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There are fascinating details from last week's American spy arrests on the
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Times front. After the Berlin Wall came down, the spies--a Pentagon
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lawyer, her husband, and a friend--who had sold secrets to East Germany for
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many years, felt at loose ends and were anxious to get back in the game. And in
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1995, the woman wrote a very personal letter (the Times calls it an
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"ideological come-on") to a Communist in the post-apartheid South African
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government indicating her availability to continue the old struggle. The FBI,
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who had been monitoring this woman based on spotty information from East German
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intelligence files, intercepted the letter and forged a reply inviting her to
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spy for South Africa. Eventually the woman met with a person she thought was a
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South African agent and for $1,000, gave him a Pentagon spending document and a
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CIA memorandum on the international arms market. He was an FBI agent. Similar
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traps were set for the two men. The story contains at least one suggestion that
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the couple had a deep need to get caught: they named their kids after the
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founders of the German Communist Party.
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